How Did They Do That? Magic and Mesmerism
Traditional Variety including the speciality arts of ventriloquism, animal acts and magic, brought to vivid life through the lens of writer Amanda Daltonβs childhood fascinations.
Traditional Variety has been a lifelong fascination for poet and playwright Amanda Dalton. She grew up in a family that included several amateur and professional entertainers and from an early age the world of Variety Theatre was βin her bloodβ... During WW2, her dad organised and performed in a night of entertainment at King Faroukβs palace in Cairo, She recalls her mum tap dancing in the kitchen as the dinner burnt. One of her most precious and prized possessions is a poster, retrieved from her uncleβs home, for a variety show at the New Hippodrome, Darlington in 1938 - acts including Waldiniβs Famous Gypsy Band, Billy Brown Upside Down and his wonderful dog Lady and her uncle himself, Barry Phelps. With Idina Scott Gatty, Entertainer. As a child, Amanda never missed Sunday Night at the London Palladium or the Good Old Days on TV. Variety shows were her parentsβ favourites - her obsession with them is perhaps not surprising.
The acts that have always most fascinated her are those βspecialityβ acts that disturb even as they entertain, designed to bamboozle the audience and mess with the mind. These essays will explore Amandaβs relationship with the different kinds of acts that thrived as UK Variety emerged from the embers of Music Hall (1930s β 1950s). Listeners are introduced to some of the key performers, a fascinating collection of unusual and striking characters with extraordinary skills and showmanship.
Essay 5: How Did They Do That? Magic and Mesmerism
In this final essay, Amanda explores the world of magicians and hypnotists - the blurred line between acts of illusion and the apparently paranormal, the moment when the solidity of our logical, rational narrative of the world starts to fall away and we enter a state of bewilderment. The essay springs from Amandaβs memories of her own childhood fascination with magic and her desire for it to be βrealβ, despite her terror of psychic phenomena - a fascination that is still with her today and continues to inform her writing. βThatβs entertainment??β asks the essay, as it ponders the connections between amusement, thrill, escapism and fear.
Writer and reader, Amanda Dalton
Producer, Polly Thomas
Exec Producer, Eloise Whitmore
A Naked Production for ΒιΆΉΤΌΕΔ Radio 3.
Biog
Amanda Dalton is poet, playwright and essayist based in West Yorkshire. She has written extensively for ΒιΆΉΤΌΕΔ Radio 4 and 3 and for theatres including Manchesterβs Royal Exchange, Sheffield Theatres, and Theatre By The Lake, Keswick who are premiering her radical adaptation of Francis Hodgson Burnettβs A Little Princess during Winter 2023-4. Her poetry collections are published by Bloodaxe Books and she has pamphlets with Smith|Doorstop and ARC. A new collection β Fantastic Voyage β is forthcoming from Bloodaxe in May 2024 and includes some poems about magic!
Last on
More episodes
Next
Coming soon
Broadcast
- Fri 12 Jan 2024 22:45ΒιΆΉΤΌΕΔ Radio 3
Death in Trieste
Watch: My Deaf World
The Book that Changed Me
Five figures from the arts and science introduce books that changed their lives and work.
Podcast
-
The Essay
Essays from leading writers on arts, history, philosophy, science, religion and beyond.